 I see folks are jumping on the call. We're so excited to have you. We'll get started in another minute or two. Patrick, you can go to the next slide. But we know last week about 7.6 million people took to the streets globally from all over. And we wanna know where you're calling in from tonight. So before we get started, if you hop over into the chat box to the right, type in where you're calling us from. We wanna know what area you're repping and we'll get started in about two minutes. Shout out to Cali, Pennsylvania, Texas, DC. Shout out to Chicago. Hey, Georgia, I'm in Atlanta, come see me. Brooklyn, it's exciting, y'all. All right, California, y'all are deep on the call. And you know, Carolina people? All right, so let's go ahead and get this party started. We have a packed agenda for you all tonight. Patrick, you can go ahead and events to the next slide, please. Thank you so much. But before we get started, I wanna start off tonight the way I often start off in-person meetings. And that's with recognition that wherever you guys are calling from, that we're on Occupied Territory of Indigenous People who've called this place home long before us. So whether you're calling from the native land of Tongva and Southern California or the Cherokee land in the Appalachia, it's always important to recognize that. And I'm real, lead organizer here at 350. And I'm here in the Creek Indian Territory, also known as Atlanta, Georgia. And I'll be your host this evening. So we have a lot of things to get to tonight on the call. We're gonna hear from some of our local victories. 350 has these local action groups in about 110 countries and about 168 here in the U.S. And we're excited to hear from a lot of people in New Hampshire about some of the exciting work that they're doing. We'll also talk about 350's vision and strategy going forward with our national American director, Tamara, and then see what kind of co-work you guys can get plugged into. So enough from me, I'll go ahead and pass it off to Lila, who's gonna share a little bit about New Hampshire. And Lila is the co-director of 350, New Hampshire, and has been working on fossil fuel divestment since she was a teenager. So excited to hear from you. Thank you Lila for joining us tonight. Great, can you hear me okay? My name is Lila, I use she, her pronouns. I worked for 350, New Hampshire. And this past year, I have been feeling a lot of cognitive dissonance because on the one hand, we're hiring staff and we're growing and we're launching nodes and we're winning our campaigns. And on the other hand, the climate crisis is still getting worse. Our elected officials still think that we should be building gas pipelines around the state. And in New Hampshire, we're still burning coal. So this spring, we took a look at where we were and we made a commitment to up our game. And this week, we lived that out. So I got involved in climate activism about seven years ago when I was 19 years old. And I've never lived through a moment like this in the climate movement. On Saturday, I walked on to the last major coal-fired power plant in New England with 68 of my friends and colleagues and my mom who hasn't participated in direct actions since the protests at the Seabrook Nuclear power plant in the 1970s. We walked in there with a whole lot of buckets and shovels and we were met by lines of cops in full riot gear with a chopper flying overhead at the largest direct action in New Hampshire in over 40 years. And while I was sitting in the police van mentally calculating the number of Zoom hours we took to plan the action and laughing about the weird coal campaign themed sheet cake that undercover cops brought to you our potluck the night before. I was struck with a sense of relief because like many of you on this call I've been educating my community and organizing actions and citing petitions and meeting with my legislators Democrats and Republicans. And let me tell you the people in power they so often lack the vision they so often lack the courage they so often lack the will to address the climate crisis and they lack what we have. And for the first time in a long time we got to directly act out our courage and act out our will and act out our vision for a livable future. And I slept a little easier on Saturday night because while I know it can sometimes feel like nothing is enough this week, this past week we took action that is commensurate with the scale and urgency of the crisis. And we did that together as a global community and I know that we will be back as many times as it takes to shut down that coal plant in New Hampshire for good. And I know that we will be back as many times as it takes striking across the country and across the world until our elected officials take the action that we need to address the climate crisis. So if you happen to be on the call from New England and you're like, oh, how did I miss that one? Or how can I get involved in that one? Whether you have the privilege or you feel like you can risk a rest or you wanna join in a support role, capacity, please send me an email at lila at 350nh.org. I will drop my email into the chat box and thank you all for being on the call. Thank you so much, Lila. And thank you for all your tireless work. Anyone on Minnesota? Did anyone from Minnesota jump on the call? Nope. Yeah, Sheila is with us. Okay, awesome. Hey, Sheila, Sheila Lam is a board member from our Minnesota 350 group, a speaker, trainer, advocate and amazing. So happy to you, you can join us, Sheila. Go ahead, take it away. Sheila, you're on mute. Looks like we're having some technical difficulties with Sheila's line. But they're awesome, really cool pictures that she shared with us here on the PowerPoint. So, Patrick, if you wanna advance to the next slide. Awesome. Sheila wanna check in one more time to see if you're able to happen, if not, no worries. See, you're trying to get off mute and it seems like there's some tech issues over there. No worries. Hopefully, if you get to figure it out by the end of the call, we can hear from you. But I'm gonna keep us moving right along. But before I move on to our next presenter, one thing that I forgot to mention, there's gonna be options for you all to opt into some of the cool work that we shared tonight. And you'll see a poll that'll pop up after some of our presenters ask me if you wanna opt into some of the work that we're doing for here next steps. So be on the lookout for that soon. But next up, we are going to hear from Tamara, our North American director here at 350.org. She's a writer, policy, warmth, social engineer, environmental hyphen hyphen hyphen all around Batty and we're so lucky to have her. She's gonna be talking a little bit about the vision and strategy that we have here at 350.org. You can take it away, Tamara. Hi, everybody. So excited to talk to people who are exactly as crazed post climate strikes as I am. Really excited to be here. And as Raul mentioned, I'm the North America director, which means I spent a lot of time thinking about what we're doing in the US and Canada. But tonight I wanted to really talk about what we're all doing here at 350 and why we need you to make it work. We are here as a bunch of folks who care deeply as ordinary human beings about what's happened in the world around climate. And we are here because we need to build with people in every part of the country. From every single walk of life, it's really been important to us to think about this work as multiracial and multigenerational so that we can see it in the world. We have to be in order for us to see it. That means we have to work in solidarity across issues of race, class, gender and identities. The biggest threat to business as usual, which is what we're all here to disrupt, is being a part of a movement together that reflects what everyone is feeling as we're impacted by the climate crisis and to exercise our collective power to force change. We need more people to get involved and join this movement for climate action and for justice. So whatever time, money or resources you have to offer, we need it. We need to elevate the public consciousness so that everybody understands that this is the moment for the fossil fuel industry to enjoy the accountability that comes for getting us into this mess and for fueling the climate crisis while they make a lot of money doing it. Because the fossil fuel industry is to blame for creating our situation, we can't accept a political system that allows them to continue doing this to us and forcing us to pay for it. In the US 350 is just a part of a global organization that fights for a just and equitable world by stopping the fossil fuel industry but from continuing to destroy our climate, messing with our communities and ruining our chances at having a future that we can enjoy. We're a multi-racial and multi-generational organization that works to do this by building a powerful movement to confront and isolate the industry and open up political space to transform climate action into climate movement. That comes down to four different things that we focus on. We have a strategic vision that is a part of our global work but the US version of it is building a multi-racial and multi-generational organization that allows us access to and the capacity of a multi-racial and multi-generational base. That feeds into us being a part of building and deepening the grassroots climate justice movement and building widespread public blame and accountability for climate impacts and making sure that it falls right on the doorstep of the folks that delivered us here in the fossil fuel industry. Finally, that means we need to build the political opposition. So you're gonna hear from some really smart people that I get a chance to talk to pretty frequently about what that means and what kind of work you can join us to do in stopping the fossil fuel industry and building a just transition that doesn't leave out anyone. We're here for everybody. So I'm gonna stop here because there's just lots of us who wanna talk to you about how you can join this movement but we need you and thanks for your attention. Absolutely, thank you Tamara. I wanna pause right here because there's lots of beautiful things happening over here in the chat box, y'all. I see connections being made, resources being shared, folks who are shouting each other out from different locations. And I know many of you have either attended or planned your own action last week but we can't hear from all 356 of you. So take a moment, head over to the chat box and type in a few words about what it felt like to be a part of the actions last week. And I'll give you guys a quick second to run over there and do that. Powerful, inspiring, incredible, energizing, learning lots about activism. Some folks who are part of the Shut It Down DC. Great stuff, y'all. This makes my heart really happy. A lot of the youth engagement, yes. Gonna ask that. Awesome, great y'all. Well, I hope we get to hear more from y'all later on after this call. But next up, we are going to hear about how we get involved in shutting down the fossil fuels for my girl, the brilliant Kendall, our US campaign manager. Take it away, Kendall. Hey, everyone. Can you hear me okay? Okay, great. I'm so excited to be on this call with all of you. I'm Kendall Mackey. I use she and her pronouns. I'm a US campaign manager here at 350.org, joining you all from Portland, Maine, which is occupied Babanaki Territory. I had the pleasure of bringing my 12-year-old niece and nine-year-old nephew to their first ever protest at the Climate Strikes on the steps of the City Hall in Portland, Maine with 3,000 other young folks on September 20th. And I can't tell you the experience of watching them as they watched, as they looked at and watched a 13-year-old stand in front of a crowd of thousands of people and talk about why this issue of the climate crisis was so important to her and their entire generation. So I just want to acknowledge this has been a really exciting time to see the new leadership of the climate justice movement emerge and really take power and speak truth to power. So real quick, I'm going to be covering ways that you all can get involved. I know many of folks on this call are already deeply involved in community organizing happening to protect y'all's communities from the climate crisis and the fossil fuel industry. I'm going to talk a little bit about 350.org's US strategy and how you can engage and plug in. So we started about 10 years ago and have been building a massive global movement to fight for climate justice by confronting the industry most responsible for the crisis, the fossil fuel industry. We know for hundreds of years this industry has been polluting our communities, most specifically Black, Brown and Indigenous communities and for decades has been knowingly contributing to the destabilization of our planet and has been spreading misinformation to confuse us about what we're seeing happening with the climate crisis. This has all been fueled by the industry. But September 20th and the week of action following marked a huge turning point in our movement for climate justice. The strikes demonstrated very clearly that people around the world understand that the fossil fuel industry is responsible for this crisis and that we need to hold them and any actor that continues to allow them to operate with business as usual accountable. Our goal is really clear. We need to move beyond fossil fuels. This may sound like a huge undertaking and that's because it is. But the history of social movements tells us that change is possible if enough people rise up and demand it. Our strategy here at 350 to take down the fossil fuel industry is super clear and has three parts. One, we need to build a movement big enough to challenge the fossil fuel industry through bold and creative action. We need everybody in the streets demanding change. Two, we need to target politicians and agencies that continue to do the bidding of the fossil fuel industry by allowing permits and other and like in other means for the industry to continue expand and we need to stop these projects wherever they're proposed. And three, we need to target the financial institutions, the banks that continue to bankroll these projects at the expense of our communities and our climate. So over the last few years we've built a huge global movement that's specifically targeting, taking on and stopping the expansion of the fossil fuel industry. One of Trump's first moves when he stepped into office as president was to reverse years of organizing and campaigning and movement building and reverse Obama's decision to approve the Keystone XL pipeline, a dirty project that would unleash the largest carbon bomb on the planet, the Alberta Tarsans. The victory to get this project rejected by the Obama administration was led by the indigenous movement in the U.S. and in Canada and we fought for years to ensure that projects like Keystone that would unleash this carbon bomb of the Tarsans would not move forward. This was the first move that Trump made when he stepped into office and this pipeline years later has still not been built because our movement has organized and continued to fight every step of the way and we will continue to keep fighting until this project and every project like it never gets built. But we know that the political climate that we're up against the administration that is currently in power building projects like Keystone is a top priority in order to continue to do the bidding of the fossil fuel industry and so that's why ahead of the 2020 election we are doubling down on our efforts. We know that our movement is made stronger when we work in solidarity and follow the leadership of those directly impacted by the climate crisis and we've teamed up with indigenous leaders and farmers and ranchers students young folks and scientists that are fighting to make sure that Keystone XL and projects all across the country never get built. One project that we've launched in the last few years is called the promised protect which is a commitment that over 30,000 folks across the country have already signed to travel to the route of Keystone XL and participate in creative resistance if invited by the leadership on the ground. This is a huge moment for our movement to demonstrate that collectively we are willing to take action to take risk to ensure that projects like Keystone never get built but the fight is bigger than just one pipeline. We need people at every corner of this country and around the world to be fighting the expansion of the fossil fuel industry from pipelines to power plants to export terminals. We need to stop business as usual for the fossil fuel industry and the politicians that do their bidding and we need to catalyze a movement that takes our anger from the decades of climate denial to the energy of the climate strikes so that we can end the era of fossil fuels and we want you to join us in this movement but it's not just our elected leaders that are allowing the expansion of the fossil fuel industry. The financial sector in particular JP Morgan Chase is the world's largest funder of the climate crisis by a long way. Since the Paris Climate Agreement that was signed in 2015 Chase Bank has invested $196 billion in fossil fuels. Breaking down those numbers since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015 Chase has spent $67 billion specifically funding the expansion of fossil fuels providing funded for massive new coal mines massive new tar sands pipelines like Keystone and Line 3 and massive new oil pipelines like the Dakota Access Pipeline. For three years though a broad coalition of groups across the U.S. and around the world has been campaigning to push financial backers like JP Morgan Chase to align its business model with a livable climate and completely stop funding fossil fuels. The campaign has been following Chase CEO Jamie Diamond around the country disrupting almost every speaking event he participated in. They've introduced shareholder resolutions. They've managed to get major cultural and media institutions like the New Yorker and Bloomberg to draw attention to Chase's role in the climate crisis. And this pressure is starting to work but we need to continue building it because if they don't hear from folks all across the country and all around the world that they need to stop funding fossil fuels they'll continue to bankroll the fossil fuels business model. So whether you're with an organization or can join a coalition or ready to organize local actions we need you to plug in to this strategy. We need you to join our movement in the streets. We need to join our movement in pressuring our elected officials and our agencies to do the work for our communities and not big oil. And we need to put pressure on the financial institutions that are continuing to allow the industry to hedge their bets on their profits over our people and our planet. So we want you all to plug in. We want you all to get involved. Shareen, I'd love for you to pop the poll so that folks that are joining us can indicate how they're going to plug in. What's the next step y'all are going to take? I'll pause and see if we can get that pull up. So on your screen you can see you can opt into both. We hope that you do. The first question is are you interested in signing the proms to protect and pledge to take creative action to make sure that Keystone never gets built. You can indicate by pressing yes no or you might have already signed it. Lots of folks across the country already have an option to is are you interested in joining the fight to stop Chase Bank from funding dirty pipelines like Keystone Excel and line three. So we're going to wait a second for folks to indicate how they want to get involved. And again, I just want to underscore whether it's targeting the banks or government officials or plugging into fight regulatory processes. The one ingredient that's core to all of this is a mass movement that's demanding change and that happens when all of us are in the streets activating organizing with our communities and fighting for climate justice. So thank you all so much for joining this call. I don't want to pass back to Ralph. Thank you, Kendall. And I'm seeing some comments. Folks are having trouble pulling up the poll. It could be because you have several windows up. But don't worry if you're having trouble accessing the poll, I'm going to share a way for everyone to contact us if they want to get engaged in these fights if you're not able to take the poll. So don't worry y'all we'll make sure we capture you later. Also seeing a lot of good things over here in the chat box. I saw system change, not climate change. I saw a few folks saying they're going to cancel their credit cards with Chase Bank. That's amazing. And Heather who is 15, I'm not sure what you're calling in from Heather. We want to know how young people can get involved. So excited you can join us Heather. Again, I'll be sharing later on how you can get in touch with us and we can link you with one of our organizers. So next up is our US remote chain coordinator, the fellow with the amazing hair at the top of your screen. Sean is going to talk to a little bit about voter registration and how you can get involved. Go ahead, take it away, John. Hi y'all, thanks so much for all. My name is John Qua. I'm a remote teams coordinator and electoral organizer with 350 Action. I'm calling from in from Washington DC on Piscataway occupied land. So I want to give a shout out quickly to 350 DC for the amazing shutdown DC action that I saw some of y'all in the comments were involved with just a few weeks ago. So inspiring to see that. My job is to connect our 350 climate justice movement to the two ways to engage and influence the upcoming 2020 elections. And I want to talk a little bit about how y'all can connect our work to our work on that front. We all know 2020 is going to be a very big year for many progressive fights and especially the fight for climate justice. Movements have an incredible incredible opportunity with the 2020 elections to enact major wins on climate justice and on progressive reform at large. And we can do so in a way that builds back into our movements so we can build power for the movements that we no need to win way beyond November 2020. Those 2020 wins will be when we're talking about those we do mean the White House but we're not just talking about the presidential race. We're focused on building out a new bench of climate progressives in the House, the Senate and winning ballot initiatives for climate action at the state and city level all across the country. Right now we're working on holding candidates running for office in 2020 at all levels of government accountable to several things and I want to name four in particular. One, the no fossil fuel money pledge a commitment to drop all donations for major fossil fuel companies so they're beholden to the people that they're actually running to represent and not fossil fenders. A pledge to keep it in the ground to have a record that has fought back against the construction of major pipelines oil terminals and frack gas infrastructure and a pledge to continue to do so in office. We know as Kendall said that we need we need to keep it in the ground if we want to see a livable future for our for our generations to come and we also know we need to protect communities on the front lines of this infrastructure. So the elections are a great way to ensure that we have commitments from our politicians that will that they will do that. The Green New Deal we're aiming to provide amazing green new jobs for a struggling economy while also building a fossil free future and our day one pledge which in that we're asking candidates especially for the White House to commit to the Paris climate accords to banning offshore drilling drilling on public lands and to investigate Exxon day one of their present of the presidency because we know Exxon has to see the public on climate change for decades. We are going to be doing a ton of stuff on on all of these angles but in particular I want to pull out our work to register voters over the next year especially over the next few months but as we get closer to the election registering voters is so so important for 2020 for a few reasons. One straight up they're trying to keep us from voting we voter suppression laws are popping up state by state and are disproportionately affecting people of color low income folks indigenous communities and marginal marginalized communities overall and while we know that voter registration is not going to solve all of what we want solved or even fix voting the problems of voter voter suppression at large we do know that starting voter registration drives in our communities and our movements early will help to ensure as many folks as possible have the fundamental right to to vote secured for 2020. We also know that we can win when we vote we have the majority behind our backs most people want bold climate action are inspired by bold policy proposals on climate change with the Green New Deal and many others. And finally we know it's a great way to build out our campaigns and our movements. Elections are great and understandable access point to our movements that many for many for who many it is the first time engaging with politics and thinking about how politics impacts their own their own lives including voter registration as part of our actions and as part of our activism can help engage new activists and build out the base that we already have. We I would love to invite you to our October 15th training where on the day of the fourth debate for the Democratic primaries we're going to be holding a panel and a training. One is a panel of activists including youth activists from the climate strikes who will be talking about what to expect from the debates what they're looking for for real climate justice champions some guidance on how to interact with the debates on social media specifically with hashtags to use who to tweet at in terms of the candidates and the moderators and then finally a training on how to use our new voter registration tool to register your friends and family and get started on that right away. So right now I would love I'm sure if you could pop up the poll if you're interested in coming to that training on October 15th please mark yes on this poll and we'll get in contact with you about how to join. We know you know voter registration the elections are not everything to our movement we need to we need to be building power in many many ways beyond that bold direct action many other many other ways but elections can be an incredible way to gain real commitments from our elected officials and hold wins that we can organize on and commitments for years and years to come so I really hope you all can join us and thanks so much for your time. Awesome thank you John I'm going to give you folks just a quick second to answer the poll again if the posts are not coming up for you or you're on the phone and not able to see it don't worry we're going to provide you another way at the end of the call to connect with us shortly. Before I move on to the next shift I want to pause and see Sheila are you able have you figured out the tech issues we'd love to get you in if you're able looks like we still can't get Sheila from Minnesota on so hopefully we can hear from her later but you can go over to the next slide Patrick awesome I have the distinct pleasure of introducing our amazing no-fill team from left to right we have Dominique and I'm sorry Dominique I know that that's no spill there our northeast regional organizer Cassandra Repp in the southwest region in a mirror Florida Caribbean in Puerto Rico you can go to the next slide T from California and Hawaii Marquis is our southern regional organizer and Grace is our newest holding it down for the Pacific Northwest and then we have Junior who is our Appalanchian regional organizer leading our team is Jamaica the field manager and the two colleagues beta and you'll see me there with some box brace I like that picture maybe I'll use it in a tender profile and Michelle our U.S. network organizer who you'll be hearing up from next again if you're energized ready to take action but you're not quite sure where to plug in and just kind of want to maybe get in touch with one of our regional organizers we'll share you an email in a few where you can get connected with them next step Michelle on how to get involved and starting the group thanks so much well hi everyone I'm Michelle Hornier I'm the U.S. network organizer from Portland, Maine just Kendall said is part of Wabanaki territory and in my job I support systems and programs to help grow 350 local organizing across the U.S. an amazing honor to do this work and going forward I'll also be focusing part-time on local 350 groups in the states of New England we're based and so at the beginning of the call we heard from Lila from 350 New Hampshire still hoping that we can hear from Sheila in Minnesota 350 and their organizations are part of a network of over 160 local 350 affiliated groups in the U.S. and they're doing hugely impressive work to stop the fossil fuel industry and transform our economy and society toward justice justice and sustainability as we know we need to be doing right now and local 350 groups and their partners are doing the real work of making change at the local level as you know any actions that we take as individuals are a positive step but they're totally insufficient to add up to the scale of transformative change that we need we know that taking collective action as a community as is how change has happened throughout history and collective action is the only way we're going to be able to achieve the massive changes that are necessary in the very short next few years that we have so if you haven't already done so we're asking you right now to take the next step and start organizing for climate justice in your neighborhood, town or city and I understand how daunting it can feel to contemplate starting to organize for the first time I've been there myself and you don't have to go it alone the field team members that Relgist introduced are so eager to connect with you we can provide coaching and training we provide toolkits and other resources to help you engage successfully with mobilization moments like the climate strikes and we have some programs that help center racial justice and equity in your organizing work which is so critical we have a racial justice and equity community of practice for local 350 group members and a black indigenous and people of color caucus and we can help you get basic digital infrastructure set up like a 350 website contact management program getting your group on the 350 world map we can send an email blast to 350s list in your area to help recruit new people to join your group and if there are other local 350 groups in your state we can connect you to them so you can hear about their experiences exchange ideas possibly coordinate on campaigns if that makes sense so we're excited to be able to do that to help your local work and if you're already organizing at the local level that's wonderful existing groups are also welcome to affiliate as local 350 groups and there's not even any need to change your group's name or give up any existing affiliations to other orgs we can provide all these same supports I mentioned and the hope is that connecting your local fights to the broader climate justice struggle can really help amplify and grow your work so at this point I would like to see if we can open up our poll to get a little more information about your interests so if you can do that I'm just showing that would be great so we'd just like to know we're curious are you currently part of a local 350 group and if not are you interested in joining a group or starting a new group awesome thank you Michelle give you guys a quick second to answer that poll in the meantime we're going to try one last time before we wrap to see if Sheila Lamb can join us to talk a little bit about 350 Minnesota Sheila are you on I am can you hear me this time that's the way you're right on time take it away Sheila oh thank you I'm excited to share about this we are in Ojibwe and Dakota Territory and being in Minnesota we have a lot of people that were at Standing Rock so we're fighting Enbridge Line 3 who owned more than a quarter of DAPL we're also in very close proximity to where KXL is going through so we definitely have our battle part of what we did was change our strategy we moved our activities out of the Twin Cities and instead went to Duluth right on Lake Superior which is hard to Enbridge offices and right across the water from the Husky Refinery and what we did was a family event that lasted about six hours it included a march several speakers including a representative from Bad River who is fighting Enbridge as Line 5 and is currently in the process of going to court over that making them remove their line we had a person come who is a local homeowner talking about the treatment of landowners with Enbridge we had a speaker talking about missing and murdered Indigenous women we talked about voting registration and we ended it with a bang with a dynamic 16 year old who called it just like it is and she literally had everyone up on their feet which was beautiful to see after we had that a little bit of music we also had our traditional native drums we went on a march came back to the water and the entire time we had family members of Indigenous people that are either missing or had been murdered so we did a round dance and circling them and uplifting them and holding them close and then came back and fed everyone a wonderful traditional Ojibwe meal and had more entertainment we had artwork we had face painting of endangered species we had bubble blowing just beautiful art everywhere but what's unique about it is most events in Duluth especially since it's the heart of Enbridge here are very small and I'm very happy to say that we had a minimum of attendance of 1200 people and that's just the people that signed in we're estimating that number to be closer to 1500 the largest event of its kind that I've known of in over 20 years here in the Duluth region but one of the other things we focused on and I would encourage everyone that wants to talk about and get in touch with me is we focused on the fact that these extracted industries affect missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls so much but also the increase in sex trafficking and we're getting a lot of pushback from Enbridge in doing so which means we're doing something right we're creating awareness I personally was just named to the MMIW Task Force that's new here in Minnesota so they don't like having people that know what they're talking about so it was a just a huge success all the way around but we're learning the more we think out of the box get creative get original and get really inclusive of all people even though a lot of our actions are primarily Native led it is making a tremendous difference and we are getting more and more people joining and teaming up with us thank you wow thank you Sheila and for all the amazing work that you all have been doing in Minnesota an amazing group and if you're in the area Minnesota I suggest you reach out to Sheila and the Minnesota folks so y'all for folks who did not get a chance to participate in the polls you can email us at usorganizingat350.org again if you're not looking at the slideshow that's usorganizingat350.org if you want to connect with one of the regional organizers but you're not quite sure who that is have questions I want to start in a group also can someone drop that link in the in the chat the website at the top there globalclimatestrikes.net it's also a great way for folks to see all the work that they can get involved in so if you're a little fuzzy and miss some of the call don't worry click on that link and you can see some of the fights that you also can plug in to this issue is urgent and the mandate is abundantly clear that we have to put a stop to fossil fuels sorry that we didn't have time to go over Q&A but again if you have questions please reach out via that email going to X folks who are joining us before we get off the call if you can hop over to the chat one last time and leave a word of affirmation a farewell a well wish to your comrades and continue to make connections with each other and then panelists you can all come off mute and say farewell to our folks thank you so much for joining us tonight for being good stewards in this home that we're sharing and we hope to hear from you soon thank you so much to the panelists and everyone who's for being on today y'all can hop off mute and say farewell bye thank you all so much thank you everybody look forward to seeing you thank you well good job well